>unty First, Sec Last and all the 'CH IT GROW ! i ? ? W. ,s 14 PAGES rolume XXX No. 20 ?tttt Library An Independent Weekly x Published in an inde pendent part of these United States. POLK COUNTY? The Gateway of Western North Carolina Tryon, N. C.^Peeembe&lS, 1924 X (y^J v Five Cents Per Copy $1.50 a Year OIL* HILL HUNT CLUB HOLDS FIRST MEET IN TRYON Barter Brown, Well Known Local Sportsman Originates Club and Works I Hani to Make it a Success. Horse Lovers Enthusiastic Over Plan The Holly Hill Hua$ Club held' i first dra? hunt on Saturday 1 )roing of last week. About a sen riders followed the hounds, trnnd the cqurs?. Weather con. | editions were Ideal with enough *p in the air to be viery inrigor. I ng to both rider and horse. The irse run was through th0 Gillett & Fisher properties with a race ting about an hour. All attend, j ; the hunt were enthusiastic d expressed themselves as being xioas to go again. At a meeting Id later in the day, it was decid. to bold tyunta every week until ) weather became too warm j e iunts this year are to bs held >r comparatively easy courses h but flew small jumps which iy or may not be taken as the t er wishes. As riders and horses coma more at ease, there will be rp Jumps taken and the course t is hoped that by^ next fall the Db will hate a' small pack its own. The hounds are presen being urnished by ch well known local fox hunters Welton Cappe, Buriey Williams e Moss, Lit Sheban, and Irvin adsey. The Clu? has {rtans for opening i old trails which through disuse d at present, unridable. They aL expect to get maps made of al] I various trails and roads which II be useful to the tobrist. Through the kindness of Messrs rw, Ballenger and Bacon, the Club I be?n able to Ax up a small ring the Oillet property Hear the Fish Spring. Here the members may e( jumpt and play games on bofr'seback.. Various jumps have been provided consisting of a wall post, rail, rail fence, gait and wa ter jumpa. This layout will give both horse and rider a pretty good idea of wha* thev may expect in a hunting field or show ring. There are it present only about a half dozen members who have taken jumping, but more have expressed a desire to own their own horses and have them trained. Carter Brown, host of ' Pino Crest Inn, and originator of thQ Club, la giving lots of time to it in the hope* of developing it int0 a decided at traction to the tourist. He ex pressed himself as willing to help anyone who wish to learn to Jump and get started on the "right foot. The Club ha8 not gon0 far in its or. ganization so anyone who is inter I ested may become a charter mem. ber by expressing their desire to dc so. It is planned to have junior and senio'i} memberships, also non-res ident memberships for the tourists^ The dues will be small ? Just enough tQ cover the running ex penses. Tryon is famous for Its saddle horses. There are few towns like it in North Carolina. It is safe to say that seventy-five per cent of the tourists which come here ridf hors? back. Some come because oi the unexcelled opportunities for riding ? others become enthusiasts after spending a season here Both liveries feel that they must get more and better horses for the coming season aa they are receiv ing many reservations for horses this 8pring# OCAL ARTIST TALENT STAGES SPLENDID PROGRAM t Hawkins, Lawrence Mazzanovitch Arthur Carver, Helen Johnson, Miss Brooks and Mrs. Lindsey Combine to Entertain Representative Tryon Audience ie of the rare treats of the ing holiday season was the mu entertainment 8lyen Parish ?e Tuesday afternoon "at 3:30 a group of Tryon artists^ by iption^ assisted by Miss Brooks Mr. Arthur Carver, of Hender le. concert was in tie nature of leflt performance, and it was gratifying to see the house with appreciative people whc on every word or note til] close of the program. We tak liar pride in making special of the readings of Mrs. V Jbert, whof a8 Iris Hawkins amier danseuse in England actress of rare genius. It Mrs. Hebbert in mind ie8 Barrie originally pro [the famous play( Peter Pan | ne Solo j Arthur Carver ? felice" (Krnaa#), Verdi ? (b) mio ben". Glordanl. 8olo; Miss Brooks? im. u ? Rhinold. 0 Solo; Miss Helen Johnson 1 "Thistledown." Ashford, (b)? Butterfly/' Hawley. ing; Mrs. V. S. Hebbert? 'A Smuggler's Song," Kipling? "Little Boy Blue," Field. tone Solo; Lawrence Maszan l ? (a) "Two Grenadiers," -'(b) 'Salt Water Ballads" >lin Solo; Mrs John Lindsey ? "Adoration" Berowski ? (b) lette/' Beethoven, PART TWO o Solo; Miss Brooks? ennoi," Rubenstein. t olin and Voice; Mrs. Lindsey? Carver^-'Tiddle and K" Goodwe ? (b) "Top to' the ing/'Eagan, Joprano Solo; Miss Johnson ? (a) Nil o* tW Wisp r JB prose ? (b) e in my Heart/' Woodman. Btritone Sole ; Lawrence Mussan pch ? (a) "On the road to Manda. Speaks ? (b) "Requiem" (St? on) Homer. " | ^olia ^olo; Mrs. Lindsey? (a) neitte/' Friml? <b) ^Lullaby" program waa doted with, a group of Negro Spirituels arranged by Mr_ ? Harry Burleigh, of the St. George'8 Choir. New York and sung by Mr. Carver. The accompanists J for th-i afternoon's program were: Mrs. Clemens. Mrs. Misslldine. and Miss Brooks. 0 Harry Harrison, formerly employ, at Missildlne's, "but now In the cafe business In Inman, visited friends in Tryon and looked after looked after business matters dur ing the holidays. George Bradford Remick, who j has been attending the Blue Ridge j School for boys, near Ashevlllej spent the holidays In Tryon with j his parents, Mr. and Mn# R. C j Remick; The first of the year Master George will enter tfie Co. lumbia Millltary Acadamy in Columbia, C. D D Watson, of Wilson, N. C# who is a traveling salesman out of Baltimore for a big electrical firm j of that city, and Mr. and Mrs. G [J. Watson of New Orleans, La. have returned to their homag after a pleasant holiday visit in Tryon with their mother Mrs S T Wat ? ? ? son, and brother Dick of the Tryon Pharmacy. Apropos t.0 our news story in the 1 News Holiday Edition with regards i to Lawrence Mazzanovitch and his growing fame as a Painter of nxe genius, comeg the following item in the section of New York Times de voted to art and music: "A collection of thirty paintings by Lawrence Mazzanovitch is on exhibition at the Howard Young Gallery, where it was displayed throughout December. The group includes pictures of the Blue Ridge Mount- Ins painted last year while the artist was at his summer home In Tryon, N. C., and other land scapes. Mr. Mazzanovttch. exhibit, ed at the Paris Salon in 1909, and one of hi8 pictures was purchased for the permanent collection at the Chicago Art Instil tute." Blue Ridge Club Will Erect! Two Million Dollar Structure Chicago Hotel Operators Secure Site on Tryon-CoMus Highway and Announce Plans forjGigantic Development TRYON BUSINESS MEM PLEDGE COCRPORATION Tryon promises to become one j of the most popular ^ear round resorts of the court try if the plans iof certain interests are carried out to completion. Chas.JJ. Lynch, acting as agent : for the McGuires of Chicago, j welP known Windy City hotel ! operators, announces the closing of a deal involving five hundred acres lying on the Tryon-Colum bus Highway, two miles north- 1 east of Tryon. At this point a modern three hundred room resort hotel will be erected, with an eighteen hole golf course, tennis courts,' and traps, by the Blue^Jiidge Country Club." '? ? ; ' A famous golf architect who recently surveyed the proposed golf course which will extend along the winding Pacolet river amongst the rocks and pine trees, exclaimed ? "This will be a St. Andrews of the Sky.'%. The fairways are straight' and true, the hazards are natural trees, boulders, rocks, hills and streams. Each tee will offer a charming view of the surround ing Blue Ridge. The Clubhouse will be a comod ious building of architectural beauty rivaling in appearance and furnishings the best known resort hotels of the country. Draperies and furnishings will be of native workmanship so far as it is possible to secure them, it is said. Special servant's quarters, a chauffer's club, play rooms for children, bowling-alleys and bil liard rooms, together with a magnificent dance floor will make the Club house particularly at tractive to the wealthy people who-may secure membership in the exclusive organization.. Daily market quotations from New York and Chicago will be received by special leased wire," and one of the best knowji^ or chestras in the country will be engaged permanently. For something over a year the McGuires, father and son, have been regular visitors in, Tryon and it has long been rumored | that they would engage in the / hotel business here. Unexpect ed delay in securing the neces sary land held them up and their plans hung fire until Mr. Lynch was retained as local represents- , tive. He secured the assistance of local business men and managed j to bring the recalcitrant prop- j erty owners to terms. Now all j details have been successfully! terminated and the Blue Ridg-jj Club becomes an assured fact ! rather than a remote possibility, j In addition to the erection c a j the Blue Ridge Club, R. C. Rem - , ick announces that he will pro- j ceed with development of the; Ho? pack Mountain Club on an extensive scale. . Hog Back, rising 3,200 feet, looms high on the horizon and , offers one of the finest views of j of the Appalachians to be fourd j anywhere. Mr, Remick's plaj;: call for a golf course, polo grourd and club house. It is asserted that a hard surfaced road will be built from Tryon to the moun tain top by| the Hog Back inter ests, and probably on over the mountain to the Greenville-Hen personville Highway. . These developments, together with the purchase of a school site by the management of St Genevieves-of-the-Pines of A3he viile, and the possibility of im-. mediate action on their part has created a spirit of optimism in Tryon which it would be hard to equal in any city of its size in a'l America. Located at the very foot of the Blue Ridge in the far-famed Thermal Belt; Tryon enjoys a mean temperature for the year of seventy-one degrees, ft is never excessively cold in Tryon, nor is it excessively hot. In the early spring peach tree* in lavish blossom, dogwood, magr nolia and tulip, vie with laurel and rhododendron for the glory of the hills which rise the color of fine tobacco smoke against the sapphire sky. Blessed with every natural ad vantage, Tryon and the country surrounding it will eventually rank with French Lick, Saratoga, and White Sulphur as a popular gathering place for discriminat ing people. WERCrRiZING COMPANY i CELEBRATES CHRISTMAS ; The ? uthern Mercerizing Com pany, ev r looking to the best In. tireatfl <? its employees, made a (Jhrlstmn; pift to each of sixty ..wo mill workers that will tie appr :iated the ? flfty-two weeks <jf tho coming | year. This Present In tfr e form of subscriptions to the P'^lk County News and Inter. **ting hems from the Mill Village be /eatured henceforth in oar Aluirns This enterprising con cern likewise ipsued Christmas ijin^mb.-. nces to its business fiends t.i the slip,pe of a wound tobbin "ith base, made of copper j uai -ul for a paper weight I Tfce!r f ade mark, "Somerco" is e?ibos^e<i in red letters. Such a 81$ will >e a daily reminder of the pr>Tpo?< and prosperity, not only of^hc Southern i Mercerizing Co, but<>f all, North Carolina. GENTLEMAN JIM" ( HAS A RIVAL ! ' ? J&k last a heavyweight champion Uppcsred who . likes to wear i clothes even better than "Gen In Jin '* Corbett. This new pic? lof Jtcjk Dempsey show* 'h* '<? in oi3 "open faced" frock. I EDWARDS-SHERFEY WEDDING EVENT OF THEJOUDAY SEASON Popular Tryon Couple Married lo Saluda Day before Christmas will remain in Tryon for some weeks before leaving for East A wedding of marked interest j to native Tryon and Polk County people as well as new residents who -remember the bride pleasantly from business associations, was that of Mr. Marvin D. Edwards and Miss Virginia Sherfey, which was soleminized Wednesday, December 24, at 3 o'clock, p. m. in Saluda, The beautiful ring ceremony was read by their pastor, Rev. P. B. Parker at the Methodist Parsonage.' The attendants were Mr. Walter Edwards, a brother, and Miss Clara Edwards, a cousin of the groom and Miss Grace Holbertj a close friend of the bride. ? The bride who is a very handsome young woman was charming in a navy blue velvet dress with gray ac cessories and hat to match. After the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. wards came to Tryon and started their honeymoon at the home of tjie bride's sister, Mrs. Curtis Garrett who resides at Kennedy Vineyard, just west of town/ Marvin Edwards is a son of Postmaster S. B. Edwards, and is i . native of Polk County. He left Try. f on last May and took a mechanlc'i course In Rahe'g Electrical School, Pittsburg", After finishing his stud ies, he accepted a position with the Ft Thomas Auto Shop^ of Ft. Thom as, Ky., as an expert mechanic which place he held until hU return to Trvon last Tuesday. The bride is a native of Johnson City, Tennessee, daughter of Rer.. and Mrs. Joel Sherfey^ who are now occupying their cc^untry home near Saluda. Prior to coming to Tryon Miss Sherfey spent several seasons with a sister in Dade City, Florida and also held a position in Monte Claire N. J.f where she spent the year i921^ making many friends in both cities. She has been T. A Hippy's chief assistant in Tryon'g Cash and Carry Store for the past tw0 ^ears^ and in that capacity will be missed ^7 th0 hundreds of cus tomers who appreciated her helpful service and friendly smile. The Newlyweds will ljemain *n Tryon for several week#, after which they will make their homje in some Eastern city, possibly Cin cinnati, Ohio. UNTY Helen Leonard, the little daugh ter of James Leonard, who is at tending school at Saared Heart Academy spent the holidays in Try. on with her father. Miss Marie McGowan. of Spartan burg who made many friends in Tryon last summer while managing Mrs. E. P, Williams' boarding house will open the Mountain Industries tea room on January 5th. Miss Mc Gowan will cater to Parties of all kinds as well as giving regular ser. vice throughout the season. A publication of decided merit ie The Skyland Banner, pomplied by Principal E, J, Hayes, and the pu pils of the Tryon Colored Schools The Banner is issued monthly^ and the Christmas Edition was a very attractive ai well as creditable pro duction. Mr, Rufus/Durham and Miss Bes. sie Parker, Doth Employees of the Southern Mercerising Company- and residents of the Mill Village, were married ^-Saturday December 20th. Miss Cora Fisher of Henderson ville spent several days this week visiting in Tryon, the guest of her i sister, Mrs. F. K# McFarland, She was accompanied home by little Betty and Mary McFarland, who made a vjsi^ in Hendersonville be* for their return home Thursday. Tryon and Polk County friendp i will find interest in the engagement of John Washburn, this city to Miss Martha Hooker, of Belmont | Mass. The of friends and acquain. tences of Mrs, Mate T. Cobb will be gratified to learn that she If recovering from a severe attack of grippe, Mrs. Cobb is advanced in Tears, but her wonderful vitalltj is & great advantage in pulling her through safely. A O. Culbreth, of Ionian has ac. cepted a position wit ti the TryoD Pharmacy and will beljin his duties the first of the year .J Mr, Joe T. Edwards. prominent farmer and citizen of Polk County whose residence '8 on Route 1,. Mil] Springy was married on December 18 to MtSg Sue Shehan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Shehan, of Rutherfordton. The bride is very popular in her town, having worked for sometime with R. P. Geer & Co at Rutheirfordton, and is known as a charming and talented young woman. Their- friends wish them ? long married life and a prosperous | Major J. C. Mehaffev stationed at Baltimore with the Arco-Englneer ing Corps and head 6f- River and Ilarbor Work, spent tfce holidays | in Tryon with his parent!, Mr. and j Mrs. W# R. M chaffer. | At the awarding o^ priies by the Balienger Company on December 20 ,< Birch Arledgef a local plumber held i the luoky number which won the hadsome kitchen cabinet Two previous numbers were called with i absentee ticket holder* ! ? Mr Harry C. Brad thaw, Ut I Chas. T. Cobb. Mr. Lawrence Ooelet and Mr. Reginald Etheridge were j dinner guesta of Mr. and Mr?. H. A I Shannon, on Christmas Bay. Mr. Hugh Selbela, of Columbia S. Cif and Dr. Robert Durhamf of Henry Ford Hospital^ Detroit, are spending the holidays In Tryon with Mr. and Mrs. James Vernor, Jr. t Mr. and Mrs. R. C, Remlck and Mr. and Mrs. Carter Brown were at Ashevllle Tuesday attending the horse show. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Klipln were I among the guests at ' the George Vanderbilt Hotel In Ashevllle for several day8 during the holidays, - Miss Syble Gaze and Miss G ,Gaze, Mrs. G. E. Gaze of Greenville S. Cff and Mrs. Knight, of Atlanta Ga.; visited their sister. Mrs. Jas. Lank ford, during the holidays. john Gray of Gastonla, N. q., spent the holidays in Try on as a house guest of Dr. W. W. Gray, Chas. A^ Hagamati, of Hickory ^ has been In Tryon on business for the Dast few days. Mr. Rhodes, of Anderson, 8. C.; a well known hosiery mannfactur. er of that place and a native of Polk County, spent the holidays in Tryon vlalting old ^friends. Etna Caldwell who Is attending State College, spent the holidays with ihla mother Mrs^ Chas. J. Lynchj and Mr. Lynch near Tryon Miss Elizabeth Grady who is at. tening college at Cleveland, Ohio, spent Christmas holidays in Tryon vith her parents Dr., and Mrs. E&rle Grady. Mr. und Mrsf R. M. McCowan will leave the first of January for an extended tour of the Hawalan Islands In 'company wltji their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clement and family.

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